120 Mo. 12 | Mo. | 1894
Daniel B. Sickles commenced a suit of attachment in the circuit court of the city of St. Louis against the Anchor Manufacturing Company, in March, 1890. The sheriff levied the writ upon a small steam boiler, a stave cutting machine and some other machinery and office furniture and also upon some $5,000 worth of barrels and barrel ■ material, all of which was then in the possession of James H. Parker, the plaintiff in this action. Parker served upon the sheriff a written notice of a claim to the property, stating the claim to be that of a factor. Thereupon the plaintiff in the attachment suit gave bond under the provisions of the act of the third of March, 1855, concerning the duties of sheriff and marshal in the
As the plaintiff’s right to recover depends ' upon, the question .whether he has a factor’s lien upon the property or any of it, and that question depends, to a considerable extent, upon the contract between the plaintiff and the Anchor Manufacturing Company, the defendant in the attachment suit, we set out the contract in full:
“This agreement, entered into this tenth day of August, 1889, between the Anchor Manufacturing Company, of Detroit, Michigan, and James H. Parker, Esq., of St. Louis, Missouri, witnesseth as follows:
■ “The .Anchor Manufacturing Company, being desirous of selling a portion of its one-stave barrel material in St. Louis and vicinity, hereby agrees to allow James JEL Parker to represent them as their agent in St. Louis, Missouri, and vicinity, under the. firm name of James H. Parker & Co., upon conditions hereinafter mentioned, from and after this date, for one year, if terms of contract are satisfactorily carried out, and for a longer time if mutually ■ agreed upon by all parties interested.
“The Anchor Manufacturing Company hereby agrees to ship barrel material, sizes andpricesto behereafter agreed upon,-to J. H. Parker & Co., of St. Louis, Missouri, making drafts on each shipment, or on general account of shipment, at sixty days.
“J. H. Parker & Co., hereby agree to accept above mentioned, drafts 6n account, and to work up a trade for the Anchor Manufacturing Company’s material^ make all collections and apply same toward Anchor*18 Manufacturing Company’s drafts and the operating expenses of their firm.
“J. H. Parker & Co. further agree to use careful judgment in the selection of their customers,. and to sell only to responsible parties.
“The Anchor Manufacturing Company agrees to assist J. H. Parker & Co. in getting the business started, and guarantees the payment of rent of a suitable plant and operating expenses during the existence of this contract, and also guarantees J. H. Parker a salary of $125 per month for the first six months, and $150 for the following six months of the first year. If the business increases constantly during the year, and grows fairly profitable, the Anchor Manufacturing Company agrees to reconsider this salary an<j. pay J. H. Parker either a commission on sales, or make some other satisfactory arrangement agreeable to both parties concerned.
“J. H. Parker & Co. hereby agree not to associate any party or person or persons as a partner with their firm in the agency, without first obtaining the consent of the Anchor Manufacturing Company, to whom all property, cooperage material and barrels, tools and fixtures belong; and J. H. Parker & Co. further agree to carry on the business of making up • this one-stave barrel material into barrels of the different sizes that are required by the trade of St. Louis and vicinity for flour, coffee, spices, chemicals and dry paints and all other merchandise that can be obtained for the one-stave barrel packages in the place named, in a businesslike manner, making full and accurate reports to the Anchor Manufacturing Company each month of the business transacted, and to get the highest price possible for the one-stave barrel at all times.”
According to the bill of exceptions, the plaintiff produced evidence tending to prove the following facts:
From the date of the contract to the commencement of the attachment suit, the Anchor Manufacturing Company shipped to the plaintiff large quantities of the barrel material. Plaintiff made up portions of this material and sold barrels and material as contemplated by the contract. He applied the proceeds to the expenses of the factory carried on by him in his name for his principal and to the expenses of the office and in liquidation of the drafts drawn on him. At the date of the attachment he had accepted drafts “at the instance and request of the Anchor Manufacturing Company, and for its accommodation” in excess of the total value of the material shipped to him. Accepted drafts were at that date outstanding and in the hands of third persons to the amount of $8,000. Some of them were renewals of former drafts. The Anchor Manufacturing Company paid plaintiff a salary of $125 per month, and the plaintiff received the barrel material so shipped to him, and accepted the drafts
The questions are: First, whether the plaintiff was a factor; and, second, if he was, whether he has a lien on the attached property or any of it because of the unpaid drafts accepted" by him.
1. A factor or commission merchant is an agent; and it is to be observed at the outset of this case that the character of factor and broker is often combined in the same person, and in such cases we are -to distinguish between,his acts in the one character and in the other. Story on Agency [9 Ed.], sec. 32a. And in like manner the character of agent and servant may be, and often is, combined iu one- and the same person, and in such cases a distinction must be made between his acts as servant and those as agent.
A factor or commission merchant is generally defined to be' “an agent employed to sell goods or merchandise, consigned or delivered to him by or for his principal, for a compensation, commonly called factorage or commission.” Story on Agency [9 Ed.], sec. 33. Again, a factor is “a commercial, agent, transacting the mercantile affairs of other men, in consideration of a fixed salary or certain commission, and, principally, though not exclusively, in the buying and selling of goods.” Anderson’s Law Dictionary. As the last definition states, and as the first implies, a factor may receive his compensation by way a fixed salary. Winne v. Hammond, 37 Ill. 99.
The person to whom property is consigned for sale is none the less a factor because he bestows labor upon it before it is ready for sale, and this is true though the character of the property be entirely changed, as where milk is converted into butter and cheese,' Bank v. Between, 127 Ill. 573. Or, where
Again, though the factor may, and usually does, sell in his own name, the goods remain the property of the principal, subject only to the factor’s lien; so that an attaching creditor of the principal may pay off the factor’s lien and hold the goods under the attachment. Lewis v. Mason, 94 Mo. 556.
The stipulations, therefore, • in the contract that the plaintiff was to, and did, receive a salary of $125 per month instead of commissions, that ■ he was to manufacture the one-stave material into barrels, and that the material shipped to him was to ' remain the property of the Anchor Manufacturing Company, do not deprive him of his character of factor or commission merchant, so far as he was the agent of that company for the sale of the property, whether sold in its unmanufactured or in a manufactured form. It may be true that he was not a factor in running and operating the barrel factory, but he was a factor so far as concerned the receipt and sale of the goods.
The other stipulations of the' contract, that plaintiff was to represent the Anchor Manufacturing Company as its agent in the sale of barrel material, that the company was to have the right to make drafts on the plaintiff on account of each shipment, or on general account, and that plaintiff was to use careful judgment in the selection of customers, are all perfectly consistent with the duties of a factor. There can be no doubt but the contract created the relation of principal and factor, as to the shipment, receipt and
2. The next question is whether the plaintiff has a factor’s lien as security for the unpaid outstanding drafts. It was conceded on argument at the bar of this court that the plaintiff had no such lien on the boiler and other machinery, or on the office furniture; and as to all such property we, therefore, express no opinion. The question for us to determine is, whether he has a lien on the manufactured and unmanufactured material which was in his possession at the date of the levy of the attachment thereon. If he has, then the judgment m.ust be reversed and the cause remanded.
The common law gives the factor a lien upon the goods of his principal in his possession, to secure the payment of the general balance of account between himself and his principal. "While there is no such lien as to independent debts created without reference to the agency, the factor has a lien to secure him against obligations which he has incurred as surety for the principal upon the strength of the consignment. Mechem on Agency, sec. 1032. Saj^s Story: “The lien may also extend to all sums for which a factor has become liable, as- a surety or otherwise, for his principal, wherever the suretyship has resulted from the nature of the agency, or it has been undertaken upon the footing of such a lien.” Story on Agency [9 Ed.], sec. 376. So it must follow, and is believed to be well settled law, that a factor has a lien on the property of his principal in his possession, to secure and protect him against accepted and unpaid drafts drawn and accepted in the course of the business of the agency.
Now there can be no doubt but that the plaintiff accepted the drafts drawn on him by the Anchor Manufacturing Company on account of and because of the
Story says: This lien “is deemed to exist in all cases, until the contrary presumption is clearly established. But, if such a presumption is clearly established, and, a fortiori, if an express agreement repelling it is proved, then the lien of the factor fails, as every other lien does, when it contravenes the intention of the parties.” Story on Agency [9 Ed.], sec. 378. A head note to Nagle v. McFeeters, 97 N. Y. 196, which fairly expresses the substance of the opinion in the abstract, is in these words: “Where a principal consigns goods to an agent to sell, under an agreement that the latter will accept bills drawn upon him by the former to the amount of goods so consigned on hand, it is a necessary inference that the drafts are to be drawn on the credit of the goods; and to the amount of acceptances outstanding, the agent has a lien on the goods in his hands, as security, and is entitled to retain the same until the acceptances are paid.”
The bill of exceptions in this case states that the plaintiff adduced evidence tending to prove that he received the barrel material so shipped to him by the Anchor Manufacturing Company, and accepted the drafts mentioned in his testimony, pursuant to the terms of the written agreement; and there is no evidence of
There is here no express waiver of a lien, nor is there a clause or word from which it can be inferred Parker was not to have a lien. There is nothing indicating such an intention. The Anchor Manufacturing Company had its home office in the state of Michigan, and it would be unreasonable and out of all character to conclude, from anything stated in this agreement, that Parker agreed to waive the lien which the law gave him to secure the payment of these acceptances. That the trial court erred in sustaining the demurrer to the evidence, we entertain no doubt whatever, and the judgment is therefore reversed and the cause remanded.